Enter Inventory Data
Key Formulas
LIFO: Newest costs → COGS
WA: Total Cost / Total Units
Tax Impact = (LIFO COGS − FIFO COGS) × Tax Rate
Goods Available for Sale
Method Comparison
| Metric | FIFO | LIFO | Weighted Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of Goods Sold | -- | -- | -- |
| Ending Inventory | -- | -- | -- |
LIFO Reserve & Tax Impact
Layer-by-Layer Detail
Formula Breakdown
Understanding Inventory Valuation Methods
Why Do Inventory Methods Matter?
The choice of inventory cost flow method directly affects a company's reported cost of goods sold, ending inventory, net income, and tax liability. Under U.S. GAAP, companies may choose FIFO, LIFO, or Weighted Average. Each method allocates the same total cost differently between COGS and ending inventory.
This identity holds regardless of the cost flow method used.
Comparing the Three Methods
FIFO
First-In, First-Out
Oldest costs go to COGS. Ending inventory reflects recent prices. Higher income when prices rise.
LIFO
Last-In, First-Out
Newest costs go to COGS. Ending inventory reflects older prices. Lower taxes when prices rise.
Weighted Average
Average Cost Method
Blends all costs into a single per-unit average. Smooths price fluctuations. Same result under periodic and perpetual for WA.
LIFO Reserve & Tax Implications
The LIFO Reserve measures the cumulative difference between FIFO and LIFO inventory values. Companies using LIFO must disclose this reserve (ASC 330). Analysts use it to convert LIFO financials to a FIFO basis for cross-company comparison.
In a rising-price environment, LIFO produces higher COGS and lower taxable income, generating real cash tax savings. However, the IRS LIFO conformity rule requires companies to use LIFO for financial reporting if they use it for tax purposes.
Model Assumptions
- Periodic inventory system — COGS computed at end of period, not per transaction
- Purchases entered in chronological order (Purchase 1 = oldest, Purchase 3 = newest)
- FIFO assigns oldest costs to COGS first; LIFO assigns newest costs first
- Weighted Average uses total cost ÷ total units, applied uniformly
- U.S. GAAP focused — IFRS prohibits LIFO (IAS 2)
- Tax impact assumes COGS difference directly affects taxable income
- For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and uses simplified periodic inventory assumptions. Actual inventory accounting involves additional complexities such as lower-of-cost-or-net-realizable-value adjustments, LIFO liquidation effects, and perpetual vs. periodic system differences. Consult professional guidance for real-world inventory decisions.